Thursday, August 28, 2008

Arabicoffers great flexibility in communication.There are varying degrees of emphasis with which a statement can be made.There are multiple options that can be manipulated in sentence structure.Similar statements can be made such as :

أحمدُ اللهَ

“I praise Allah.”نَحْمَدُ اللهَ

“We praise Allah.”

اِحْمَدُوْا اللهَ

“Praise Allah!”.

1. All of the above are Jumal Fi’liyyah.This sentence structure necessarily implies the occurrence of an act bound by time.Alhamdu Lillah is Jumlah Ismiyyah which, for one, is a far more emphatic form of declaration in Classical Arabic by comparison.Secondly, it implies continuity, stability and permanence.Another unique feature of the Ismiyyah structure is that it communicates a decisive statement.

2.Jumlah Fi’liyyah exclusively attributes an act to a specific subject. In the suggested alternatives above, ‘I’, ‘we’ and ‘you all’ are the specific subjects respectively.الحمد لله, being a Jumlah Ismiyyah, doesn’t identify the subject which makes it a universal declaration.I, we, you, they, people, animals, rocks, trees, rather all of creation can be understood as the subject!There is another beautiful subtlety here. Whether anyone or anything makes حمد of Allah or not, الحمد is still for Allah!

3.The Jumlah Fi’liyyah renditions above are limited by time and applicability.The original statement is timeless and has universal applicability.Through الحمد للهِ the way in which the praise is made is kept unspecified while in the Fi’liyyah format the praise would be by the tongue.

4. In Jumlah Fi’liyyah there is the possibility of doing an act for an object that isn’t worthy of it.For instance, ‘I paid him’. It may be that ‘he’ didn’t deserve to get paid. In Jumlah Ismiyyah the necessary implication that this praise is actually rightfully placed is naturally implied, ALHAMDULILLAH!

5. In saying الحمد لله , we are also acknowledging that حمد is the property of Allah while this is not implied in alternative fi’liyyah renditions.When using the command form, ’Praise Allah’ instead of Alhamdulillah, there are a number of shortcomings. Firstly, there is the sense that this praise is being asked of the audience. By comparison الحمد لله declares the existence of حمد without dependence on an audience responding to an imperative. The imperative may also imply a response that may or may not be voluntary while Alhamdulillah is an observation of the voluntary praise done by all forms of creation.

Sunday, August 17, 2008

Last week in my Quran Study Circle, we discussed a few verses from Surah Waqi’ah. The topic at hand was our dependence on Allah- and Allah alone. Quite often we forget that reality. Quran, over and over again, reminds us of our creation, and that we should give Shukr for His blessings. Starting from verse 57 to 74:

Verbs are connected to time, and the action occurs during the stated time, while nouns indicate a permanent state. An example of this can be: a person who is riding versus a rider. “A person riding” might mean that he is riding for the first time, or possibly the last, while “rider” may indicate his profession.

Keeping the word usage in mind, let’s look at a verse from Surah Waqi’ah:

أَأَنتُمْ تَخْلُقُونَهُ أَمْ نَحْنُ الْخَالِقُونَ56:59 Is it you who create it - or are We the source of its creation?

“Is it you who create it” [تَخْلُقُونَهُ] is the verb usage of “create”, while the last word, [الْخَالِقُونَ] translated as “We the source of its creation” is a noun. When Allah (swt) refers to us – the human being – He uses a verb – (that too, with a particle of interrogation). To imply: If you say you have the power to create, you have you ever created, even once?But Allah’s attribute is a noun. It’s a state – a permanent one.

Similarly:أَأَنتُمْ تَزْرَعُونَهُ أَمْ نَحْنُ الزَّارِعُونَ56:64 Is it you who cause it to grow - or are We the cause of its growth?Referring to human beings, the verb used for “causing to grow” is تَزْرَعُونَهُ. And the noun used as Allah’s attribute is “الزَّارِعُونَ”

Once again in:أَأَنتُمْ أَنزَلْتُمُوهُ مِنَ الْمُزْنِ أَمْ نَحْنُ الْمُنزِلُونَ56:69 Is it you who cause it to come down from the clouds - or are We the cause of its coming down?

Andأَأَنتُمْ أَنشَأْتُمْ شَجَرَتَهَا أَمْ نَحْنُ الْمُنشِؤُونَ56:72 Is it you who have brought into being the tree that serves as its fuel - or are We the cause of its coming into being?

In the interrogation clause, a verb is used. Allah’s attribute is a noun.

Allah (SWT) refers to the Quran as best of content and best of form (Quran 39:23). Shaykh Sohail in the Sunnipath course explains how every word is fit perfectly in the verse, how every word so measured and carefully selected to match the situation. Ibn ‘Atiyya, a great Spanish mufassir, said: if a words was to be removed from it, and one would go through the entire of Arabic language to find a word other than this word to replace it, you couldn’t be able to find it, I couldn’t find another word for it.________________________________________

Translation56:57 WE who have created you, [O men:] why, then, do you not accept the truth?56:58 Have you ever considered that [seed] which you emit?56:59 Is it you who create it - or are We the source of its creation?56:60 We have [indeed] decreed that death shall be [ever-present] among you: but there is nothing to prevent Us56:61 from changing the nature of your existence and bringing you into being [anew] in a manner [as yet] unknown to you.56:62 And [since] you are indeed aware of the [miracle of your] coming into being in the first instance - why, then, do you not bethink yourselves [of Us]?56:63 Have you ever considered the seed which you cast upon the soil?56:64 Is it you who cause it to grow - or are We the cause of its growth?56:65 [For,] were it Our will, We could indeed turn it into chaff, and you would be left to wonder [and to lament],56:66 “Verily, we are ruined!56:67 Nay, but we have been deprived [of our livelihood]!”56:68 Have you ever considered the water which you drink?56:69 Is it you who cause it to come down from the clouds - or are We the cause of its coming down?56:70 [It comes down sweet - but] were it Our will, We could make it burningly salty and bitter: why, then, do you not give thanks [unto Us]?56:71 Have you ever considered the fire which you kindle?56:72 Is it you who have brought into being the tree that serves as its fuel - or are We the cause of its coming into being?56:73 It is We who have made it a means to remind [you of Us], and a comfort for all who are lost and hungry in the wilderness [of their lives].56:74 Extol, then, the limitless glory of thy Sustainer’s mighty name!